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Because of significant reduction in delivery of recommended childhood immunization during the pandemic, there is a risk for resurgence of vaccine preventable infections, including measles, pertussis, and polio, which can result in significant morbidity and mortality in children, reported Amy G. Feldman, MD, of Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora, and associates.

Yangna/Thinkstock
In their literature review published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases Dr. Feldman and colleagues found that outpatient pediatric visits dropped 62% and local health departments ceased offering vaccines following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020. Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Vaccine Tracking System also showed a decrease in the number of noninfluenza vaccines ordered between January and April of 2020 by 500,000 to 3 million doses, compared with the same period the year before. The Vaccine Safety Datalink also showed a significant drop in the number of measles vaccines administered beginning the week of March 16, 2020. Similarly, a Blue Cross Blue Shield study reported a decrease of 26% in measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR); diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTaP); and polio vaccines administered between January and September of 2020 when compared to the same time period a year earlier.

Will loss of herd immunity lead to vaccine deserts?

When asked to comment, pediatric infectious disease specialist Christopher J. Harrison, MD, said, “My concern is that we may see expansion of what I call ‘vaccine deserts.’ Vaccine deserts occur in underserved communities, areas with pockets of vaccine-hesitant families or among selected groups with difficult access to health care. These vaccine deserts have held a higher density of vulnerables due to low vaccine uptake, often giving rise to outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases, e.g., measles, mumps, pertussis. They are usually due to an index case arriving from another vaccine desert (a developing country or a developed country, U.S. or foreign) where the disease is still endemic or pockets of vaccine hesitancy/refusal exist. When detected, local outbreaks result in rapid responses from public/private health collaborations that limit the outbreak. But what if vaccine deserts became more generalized in the U.S. because of loss of vaccine-induced herd immunity in many more or larger areas of our communities because of pandemic-driven lack of vaccinations? That pandemic-driven indirect damage would further stress the health care system and the economy. And it may first show up in the older children whose vaccines were deferred in the first 4-6 months of the pandemic.”

Dr. Feldman and associates cited findings from a collaborative survey conducted by UNICEF, the World Health Organization, Gavi the Vaccine Alliance, the CDC, the Sabin Vaccine Institute, and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, which found that immunization programs experienced moderate to severe disruptions or terminations in at least 68 of 129 low and middle-income countries surveyed. According to the WHO, CDC, Red Cross, and GAVI, 94 million people presently are estimated to be at risk as a consequence of not receiving their measles vaccines following the suspensions.

“These national and international declines in routine immunizations have placed the global community at significant risk for outbreaks of vaccine-preventable infections (VPIs) including measles, polio, and pertussis, diseases which are more deadly, more contagious and have a higher reproductive factor (R0) amongst children than COVID-19,” the authors observed.

Dr. Feldman and associates outlined the horrible devastation that these VPI can cause in children, including significantly higher morbidity and mortality than adults, especially among those with immunodeficiencies. Neurologic deficits, paralysis, intellectual disabilities, and vision and hearing loss are just some of the permanent effects conveyed. “It is concerning to imagine how measles could spread across the United States when social distancing restriction[s] are relaxed and unvaccinated children return to school and usual community engagement,” they noted.
 

 

 

Collaborative engagement key to course correction

The authors found that primary care providers and public health communities are working not only to restore vaccine administration but also to restore confidence that vaccine delivery is safe in spite of COVID. In addition to recommending specific risk mitigation strategies for clinicians, they also suggested individual practitioners use electronic health records to identify patients with COVID-related lapses in vaccination, employ electronic health record–based parent notification of overdue immunizations, and offer distance-friendly vaccination options that include parking lot or drive-up window vaccine delivery.

Additionally, Dr. Feldman and colleagues recommended that local, state, regional, and national health systems use public service announcements via television and digital as well as social media platforms to convey important messages about the considerable health risks associated with vaccine avoidance and the availability of free or reduced-cost vaccination programs through the federally funded Vaccines For Children program for parents out of work or without insurance. Equally important is messaging around encouraging vaccine opportunities during all health care visits, whether they be subspecialty, urgent care, emergency room, or inpatient visits. In areas where access to clinics is limited, they urged the use of mobile clinics as well as additional focus on providing medical homes to children with poor access to care.

“A partial but expanding safety net may be developing spontaneously, i.e., practices and clinics based on a patient-centered medical home (PCMH) model,” noted Dr. Harrison, professor of pediatrics, University of Missouri-Kansas City, in an interview. “When lagging vaccinations were reported in mid-2020, we checked with a local hospital–based urban clinic and two suburban private practices modeled on PCMH. Each had noted a drastic drop in well checks in the first months of the pandemic. But with ill visits nearly nonexistent, they doubled down on maintaining health maintenance visits. Even though staff and provider work hours were limited, and families were less enthusiastic about well checks, momentum appears to have grown so that, by later in 2020, vaccine uptake rates were again comparable to 2019. So, some already seem to have answered the call, but practices/clinics remain hampered by months of reduced revenue needed to support staff, providers, PPE supplies, and added infection control needs,” he said.The study was funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research Quality. Dr. Isakov disclosed relationships with various pharmaceutical companies outside the submitted work. The other authors had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Harrison’s institution receives grant funding from GSK, Merck, and Pfizer for pediatric vaccine trials and pneumococcal seroprevalence studies on which he is an investigator.

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Because of significant reduction in delivery of recommended childhood immunization during the pandemic, there is a risk for resurgence of vaccine preventable infections, including measles, pertussis, and polio, which can result in significant morbidity and mortality in children, reported Amy G. Feldman, MD, of Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora, and associates.

Yangna/Thinkstock
In their literature review published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases Dr. Feldman and colleagues found that outpatient pediatric visits dropped 62% and local health departments ceased offering vaccines following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020. Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Vaccine Tracking System also showed a decrease in the number of noninfluenza vaccines ordered between January and April of 2020 by 500,000 to 3 million doses, compared with the same period the year before. The Vaccine Safety Datalink also showed a significant drop in the number of measles vaccines administered beginning the week of March 16, 2020. Similarly, a Blue Cross Blue Shield study reported a decrease of 26% in measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR); diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTaP); and polio vaccines administered between January and September of 2020 when compared to the same time period a year earlier.

Will loss of herd immunity lead to vaccine deserts?

When asked to comment, pediatric infectious disease specialist Christopher J. Harrison, MD, said, “My concern is that we may see expansion of what I call ‘vaccine deserts.’ Vaccine deserts occur in underserved communities, areas with pockets of vaccine-hesitant families or among selected groups with difficult access to health care. These vaccine deserts have held a higher density of vulnerables due to low vaccine uptake, often giving rise to outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases, e.g., measles, mumps, pertussis. They are usually due to an index case arriving from another vaccine desert (a developing country or a developed country, U.S. or foreign) where the disease is still endemic or pockets of vaccine hesitancy/refusal exist. When detected, local outbreaks result in rapid responses from public/private health collaborations that limit the outbreak. But what if vaccine deserts became more generalized in the U.S. because of loss of vaccine-induced herd immunity in many more or larger areas of our communities because of pandemic-driven lack of vaccinations? That pandemic-driven indirect damage would further stress the health care system and the economy. And it may first show up in the older children whose vaccines were deferred in the first 4-6 months of the pandemic.”

Dr. Feldman and associates cited findings from a collaborative survey conducted by UNICEF, the World Health Organization, Gavi the Vaccine Alliance, the CDC, the Sabin Vaccine Institute, and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, which found that immunization programs experienced moderate to severe disruptions or terminations in at least 68 of 129 low and middle-income countries surveyed. According to the WHO, CDC, Red Cross, and GAVI, 94 million people presently are estimated to be at risk as a consequence of not receiving their measles vaccines following the suspensions.

“These national and international declines in routine immunizations have placed the global community at significant risk for outbreaks of vaccine-preventable infections (VPIs) including measles, polio, and pertussis, diseases which are more deadly, more contagious and have a higher reproductive factor (R0) amongst children than COVID-19,” the authors observed.

Dr. Feldman and associates outlined the horrible devastation that these VPI can cause in children, including significantly higher morbidity and mortality than adults, especially among those with immunodeficiencies. Neurologic deficits, paralysis, intellectual disabilities, and vision and hearing loss are just some of the permanent effects conveyed. “It is concerning to imagine how measles could spread across the United States when social distancing restriction[s] are relaxed and unvaccinated children return to school and usual community engagement,” they noted.
 

 

 

Collaborative engagement key to course correction

The authors found that primary care providers and public health communities are working not only to restore vaccine administration but also to restore confidence that vaccine delivery is safe in spite of COVID. In addition to recommending specific risk mitigation strategies for clinicians, they also suggested individual practitioners use electronic health records to identify patients with COVID-related lapses in vaccination, employ electronic health record–based parent notification of overdue immunizations, and offer distance-friendly vaccination options that include parking lot or drive-up window vaccine delivery.

Additionally, Dr. Feldman and colleagues recommended that local, state, regional, and national health systems use public service announcements via television and digital as well as social media platforms to convey important messages about the considerable health risks associated with vaccine avoidance and the availability of free or reduced-cost vaccination programs through the federally funded Vaccines For Children program for parents out of work or without insurance. Equally important is messaging around encouraging vaccine opportunities during all health care visits, whether they be subspecialty, urgent care, emergency room, or inpatient visits. In areas where access to clinics is limited, they urged the use of mobile clinics as well as additional focus on providing medical homes to children with poor access to care.

“A partial but expanding safety net may be developing spontaneously, i.e., practices and clinics based on a patient-centered medical home (PCMH) model,” noted Dr. Harrison, professor of pediatrics, University of Missouri-Kansas City, in an interview. “When lagging vaccinations were reported in mid-2020, we checked with a local hospital–based urban clinic and two suburban private practices modeled on PCMH. Each had noted a drastic drop in well checks in the first months of the pandemic. But with ill visits nearly nonexistent, they doubled down on maintaining health maintenance visits. Even though staff and provider work hours were limited, and families were less enthusiastic about well checks, momentum appears to have grown so that, by later in 2020, vaccine uptake rates were again comparable to 2019. So, some already seem to have answered the call, but practices/clinics remain hampered by months of reduced revenue needed to support staff, providers, PPE supplies, and added infection control needs,” he said.The study was funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research Quality. Dr. Isakov disclosed relationships with various pharmaceutical companies outside the submitted work. The other authors had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Harrison’s institution receives grant funding from GSK, Merck, and Pfizer for pediatric vaccine trials and pneumococcal seroprevalence studies on which he is an investigator.

 

Because of significant reduction in delivery of recommended childhood immunization during the pandemic, there is a risk for resurgence of vaccine preventable infections, including measles, pertussis, and polio, which can result in significant morbidity and mortality in children, reported Amy G. Feldman, MD, of Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora, and associates.

Yangna/Thinkstock
In their literature review published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases Dr. Feldman and colleagues found that outpatient pediatric visits dropped 62% and local health departments ceased offering vaccines following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020. Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Vaccine Tracking System also showed a decrease in the number of noninfluenza vaccines ordered between January and April of 2020 by 500,000 to 3 million doses, compared with the same period the year before. The Vaccine Safety Datalink also showed a significant drop in the number of measles vaccines administered beginning the week of March 16, 2020. Similarly, a Blue Cross Blue Shield study reported a decrease of 26% in measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR); diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTaP); and polio vaccines administered between January and September of 2020 when compared to the same time period a year earlier.

Will loss of herd immunity lead to vaccine deserts?

When asked to comment, pediatric infectious disease specialist Christopher J. Harrison, MD, said, “My concern is that we may see expansion of what I call ‘vaccine deserts.’ Vaccine deserts occur in underserved communities, areas with pockets of vaccine-hesitant families or among selected groups with difficult access to health care. These vaccine deserts have held a higher density of vulnerables due to low vaccine uptake, often giving rise to outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases, e.g., measles, mumps, pertussis. They are usually due to an index case arriving from another vaccine desert (a developing country or a developed country, U.S. or foreign) where the disease is still endemic or pockets of vaccine hesitancy/refusal exist. When detected, local outbreaks result in rapid responses from public/private health collaborations that limit the outbreak. But what if vaccine deserts became more generalized in the U.S. because of loss of vaccine-induced herd immunity in many more or larger areas of our communities because of pandemic-driven lack of vaccinations? That pandemic-driven indirect damage would further stress the health care system and the economy. And it may first show up in the older children whose vaccines were deferred in the first 4-6 months of the pandemic.”

Dr. Feldman and associates cited findings from a collaborative survey conducted by UNICEF, the World Health Organization, Gavi the Vaccine Alliance, the CDC, the Sabin Vaccine Institute, and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, which found that immunization programs experienced moderate to severe disruptions or terminations in at least 68 of 129 low and middle-income countries surveyed. According to the WHO, CDC, Red Cross, and GAVI, 94 million people presently are estimated to be at risk as a consequence of not receiving their measles vaccines following the suspensions.

“These national and international declines in routine immunizations have placed the global community at significant risk for outbreaks of vaccine-preventable infections (VPIs) including measles, polio, and pertussis, diseases which are more deadly, more contagious and have a higher reproductive factor (R0) amongst children than COVID-19,” the authors observed.

Dr. Feldman and associates outlined the horrible devastation that these VPI can cause in children, including significantly higher morbidity and mortality than adults, especially among those with immunodeficiencies. Neurologic deficits, paralysis, intellectual disabilities, and vision and hearing loss are just some of the permanent effects conveyed. “It is concerning to imagine how measles could spread across the United States when social distancing restriction[s] are relaxed and unvaccinated children return to school and usual community engagement,” they noted.
 

 

 

Collaborative engagement key to course correction

The authors found that primary care providers and public health communities are working not only to restore vaccine administration but also to restore confidence that vaccine delivery is safe in spite of COVID. In addition to recommending specific risk mitigation strategies for clinicians, they also suggested individual practitioners use electronic health records to identify patients with COVID-related lapses in vaccination, employ electronic health record–based parent notification of overdue immunizations, and offer distance-friendly vaccination options that include parking lot or drive-up window vaccine delivery.

Additionally, Dr. Feldman and colleagues recommended that local, state, regional, and national health systems use public service announcements via television and digital as well as social media platforms to convey important messages about the considerable health risks associated with vaccine avoidance and the availability of free or reduced-cost vaccination programs through the federally funded Vaccines For Children program for parents out of work or without insurance. Equally important is messaging around encouraging vaccine opportunities during all health care visits, whether they be subspecialty, urgent care, emergency room, or inpatient visits. In areas where access to clinics is limited, they urged the use of mobile clinics as well as additional focus on providing medical homes to children with poor access to care.

“A partial but expanding safety net may be developing spontaneously, i.e., practices and clinics based on a patient-centered medical home (PCMH) model,” noted Dr. Harrison, professor of pediatrics, University of Missouri-Kansas City, in an interview. “When lagging vaccinations were reported in mid-2020, we checked with a local hospital–based urban clinic and two suburban private practices modeled on PCMH. Each had noted a drastic drop in well checks in the first months of the pandemic. But with ill visits nearly nonexistent, they doubled down on maintaining health maintenance visits. Even though staff and provider work hours were limited, and families were less enthusiastic about well checks, momentum appears to have grown so that, by later in 2020, vaccine uptake rates were again comparable to 2019. So, some already seem to have answered the call, but practices/clinics remain hampered by months of reduced revenue needed to support staff, providers, PPE supplies, and added infection control needs,” he said.The study was funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research Quality. Dr. Isakov disclosed relationships with various pharmaceutical companies outside the submitted work. The other authors had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Harrison’s institution receives grant funding from GSK, Merck, and Pfizer for pediatric vaccine trials and pneumococcal seroprevalence studies on which he is an investigator.

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